SB 20 - OFFENSES AGAINST UNBORN CHILDREN 3:18:09 PM CHAIR McGUIRE announced that the final order of business would be CS FOR SENATE BILL NO. 20(JUD), "An Act relating to offenses against unborn children." [Adopted as the work draft on 2/15/06 was CSSB 20(2d JUD).] SENATOR FRED DYSON, Alaska State Legislature, sponsor, relayed that he agrees that the language on page 3, lines 23-25, and page 4, lines 3-5, is of dubious value, and therefore he won't object to the deletion of that language; that language read: (b) In a prosecution under this section, except for a multiple birth, the birth of a child before 37 weeks gestation with weight at birth of 2,500 grams or less is prima facie evidence of serious physical injury. 3:20:35 PM LINDA L. LAYNE, Ph.D., relayed that she is a medical anthropologist whose specialty is pregnancy law; that she has published a book on the subject, [Motherhood Lost]; and is producing an educational television series advocating for better care of women who miscarry or suffer still birth. She said: Each year in the U.S. there are nearly a million pregnancy losses, [and] the vast majority of these losses occur before 37 weeks gestation. The bill you're considering essentially criminalizes pregnancy loss. My research shows that the loss of a wished-for pregnancy is often very traumatic, and even in cases such as miscarriage clusters because of toxic exposure, women have a tendency to self-blame. So the last thing women need after a loss is to be confronted by an interrogating police officer. Although the bill quite rightly exempts the nearly 1 million women who have elective abortions, it leaves the equal number of women who suffer spontaneous abortions vulnerable to criminal investigation. Such investigations clearly increase the stress, and it exacerbates the grieving process. I'm afraid this law would also undermine maternal and fetal health by discouraging women from seeking prenatal care or hospital-based births if they're afraid of arrest. And that's why every leading medical and child welfare group that's addressed this issue has unanimously opposed laws like these that would hold women legally responsible for the outcomes of their pregnancies. Furthermore, I'm afraid a bill like this would ... have an unfair effect on racial minorities. Black women have significantly higher rates of pregnancy loss, preterm births, and very-low-birth-weight babies, and in the states that have similar laws, it's overwhelmingly black women who are being arrested for poor reproductive outcomes. I'm in favor of reducing violence against pregnant women, but I urge you ..., rather than focusing on unborn victims, to keep the focus on pregnant women and adopt enhanced penalties for violence against them. It may be helpful to think of them [in terms] ... of an analogy with police officers, as a specially protected category. Like police officers, pregnant women provide an essential service to society, and, like the police, they risk their lives in so doing. Although much less common than in earlier eras, pregnancy still brings with it the risk of death - several hundred American women die every year because of complications during pregnancy and childbirth. And homicide of pregnant women is an even greater risk. So I support your efforts to deter such crimes, but urge you to do so by adopting legislation that enhances penalties for attacks on pregnant women, rather than opening the door for making women criminally liable for the outcomes of their pregnancies. Thank you. 3:23:39 PM REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON offered a hypothetical situation in which a pregnant women drinks alcohol and then has a spontaneous abortion. He asked whether such a woman could be prosecuted under the bill. DR. LAYNE explained that under proposed AS 11.41.280(b) and AS 11.41.282(b), such a woman would be subject to a felony charge because the very fact that a child is born before 37 weeks gestation with weight at birth of 2,500 grams or less is prima facie evidence of serious physical injury. Thus a woman, on top of having to endure her own feelings of grief for the loss of a wanted pregnancy, would be subject to a criminal investigation. REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON noted that the sponsor is amenable to eliminating those provisions. He asked Dr. Layne whether the deletion of those provisions would address her concern. DR. LAYNE said that overall, her preference would be for the bill to go in the direction of providing for enhanced penalties for violent crimes against pregnant women, rather than focusing on the outcome of a pregnancy, because no pregnancy is guaranteed a healthy outcome. REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON mentioned that he too has concerns about the bill as it is currently written. 3:27:24 PM REPRESENTATIVE GARA made a motion adopt Conceptual Amendment 1, to delete the language on page 3, lines 23-25, and page 4, lines 3-5. There being no objection, Conceptual Amendment 1 was adopted. REPRESENTATIVE GARA offered his belief that there is a consensus among many members of the committee that the penalties against those who assault pregnant women ought to be enhanced. He made mention of a proposed amendment that would enhance the penalties for those who cause a miscarriage or harm a pregnant women, surmising that a lot of the debate will be on the question of whether this type of penalty enhancement should be done via a bill that uses the term, "unborn child" or whether the bill should [also] be altered so as to avoid a Roe v. Wade debate. 3:30:09 PM TILOMA JAYASINGHE, Esq., Staff Attorney, National Advocates for Pregnant Women (NAPW), remarked that although many may believe that SB 20 will protect pregnant women and their fetuses from abuse, because it is not clear that the bill is not intended to be used as a basis for arresting pregnant women and new mothers, it will, in fact, undermine the health of pregnant women and be very bad for babies. She elaborated: We know that similar bills have been used as a justification to arrest literally hundreds of pregnant women. For example, in Utah ... Melissa Roland gave birth to twins, one of whom was stillborn; Melissa was arrested for murder for not consenting to a [cesarean section] ... two weeks earlier. What this bill says in effect is that women have to guarantee a healthy birth outcome. Pregnancy, as you all know, is a possibility and not a promise. No state legislature in this country has taken the step of requiring women to guarantee the outcome of their pregnancies under the threat of criminal penalties. This bill also suggests that with respect to women who are domestic violence [DV] victims, while it cannot be used alone, it can be used as a factor permitting arrest when it never should be used as a reason. Whether a woman's pregnancy is at risk because her employer won't provide her with a safer work station, or her community won't help reduce the level of mercury in the fish that she eats, or ... her boyfriend batterers her, none of those should be a basis for investigating and arresting her if she can't guarantee a healthy outcome of her pregnancy. Every leading public health and child welfare group unanimously [opposes] the prosecution of pregnant women and new mothers, even when bills specifically target pregnant women using illegal drugs, because they understand that the threat of arrest will deter these women from seeking the care that will help them and their babies. If you are, in fact, concerned about pregnant women and their unborn fetuses, the last thing you would do is enact this bill as it's currently written because it opens the door to the possibility of arrest to any woman who decides to continue her pregnancy to term despite health concerns and other risks. It has, actually, the effect of coercing abortion rather than promoting ... continuing to term. ... Enhancing punishment is the better the way to go. In North Carolina they address this issue in a really constructive manner by keeping the focus on the pregnant woman and acknowledging the additional loss she suffers when she and her unborn child are harmed, rather than [by] creating a separate victim status for her fetus. These models ... reflect the harmful effect the loss of a pregnancy has on the woman herself without bringing all [the] additional issues that arise when you make the fetus a separate victim. The way to protect the unborn and their mothers is not by opening the jailhouse door, but by promoting the alternatives that honor and protect them. This bill [in its current draft] sends the message to women ... that if you are at risk for a premature birth, miscarriage, or stillbirth, or if you have any doubts about your ability to produce a perfectly healthy baby, abort or else face the prospect of being arrested and sent to jail. And I'm sure that is definitely not the message [the legislature wants to send]. Thank you. 3:34:15 PM ALLISON GOTTESMAN, Co-Chair, Social Action Committee, Alaska Chapter, National Association of Social Workers (NASW), said that while [the Alaska Chapter] commends the thought behind the bill - stopping offenses against unborn children - it cannot support the bill as currently written. She went on to say: I can only stress the importance that the only way to keep children safe is to keep their mothers safe. I appeal to you today to amend this bill to have enhanced penalties but not against the pregnant woman herself. ... There are serious fears that the way this bill is drafted, [it] would lock up more pregnant women than their perpetrators. I am requesting that the language of the bill be either reworked or include a statement that reads: "Nothing in this Act is intended to grant personhood to the unborn child". I thank you very much for your time today. 3:35:30 PM BRENDA STANFILL, Interior Alaska Center for Non-Violent Living, relayed that her organization cannot support the bill [as currently written], though is in support of enhanced penalties [for those who harm a pregnant woman] and the recognition that a woman has lost her child. CHAIR McGUIRE noted that Ms. Stanfill's comments were also spoken on behalf of Kate Axelarris and Jessica Stossel - also from the Interior Alaska Center for Non-Violent Living. 3:36:54 PM CLOVER SIMON, Planned Parenthood of Alaska (PPA), relayed that her main concern is that SB 20 does not contain an exemption for acts that a woman commits, and that in order for PPA to fully support the bill and even the enhanced penalties, it would definitely need to include an exemption for acts undertaken by a woman. She said that she has read through all the other states' laws pertaining to unborn victims, and the majority of those laws have an explicit exemption for acts that a woman commits, opining [that adding a similar provision] would be the best way to protect women from getting prosecuted under SB 20. 3:37:56 PM JOELLE HALL relayed that she would be testifying as a woman who has had premature delivery and who would not have appreciated being the subject of an investigation, particularly given that her premature children have turned out just fine and that lots of babies with problems are born right on time. She urged the committee to find some way to prosecute people for these egregious crimes other than making them separate crimes. 3:39:00 PM MICHAEL "WES" MACLEOD-BALL, Executive Director, Alaska Civil Liberties Union (AkCLU), referred to a question posed at the bill's last hearing regarding whether inclusion of a recklessness standard would protect a woman from prosecution for her own behavior, and offered his understanding that under a recklessness standard, one would have to be aware of a risk but consciously disregard it, with that disregard being a gross deviation from the standards of a reasonable person. Because of this, he opined, the question of whether a woman's behavior is reckless while at the same time being innocent is really in the eye of the beholder. It is conceivable, therefore, that a zealous prosecutor could envision behavior as reckless while others might view the behavior as understandable under some circumstances. MR. MACLEOD-BALL said that in such a case, a woman could be indicted and prosecuted, and even if the jury interprets the [recklessness] standard with the degree of reasonableness that he, for example, would apply, the woman would still have gone through a criminal prosecution and been subjected to all the stress and expense associated with it. Recklessness is an element of manslaughter as defined in the version of the bill before the committee, but it is not an element of the separate crime of criminally negligent homicide of a fetus. The standard for criminal negligence, he offered, is where the person fails to perceive the risk. And although there is a requirement that the harm be caused by a dangerous instrument, the definition for dangerous instrument is quite broad: anything under the circumstances that can cause death or injury. He opined that a fact question being interpreted differently by a zealous prosecutor than by a reasonable person could mean the difference between a prosecution and no prosecution. MR. MACLEOD-BALL relayed that the AkCLU also believes that the language that would exempt a woman who remains in a violent domestic situation from the standard of extreme indifference has problems of its own. First, it says that the decision to remain in the violent situation cannot constitute extreme indifference. So what else beyond the decision to remain in that situation would allow a finding of extreme indifference? It seems to him, he remarked, that a mere scintilla of evidence added to the decision to remain in the violent situation would be enough for some prosecutors to bring a case. For example, what if there is evidence that the woman was not in favor of the pregnancy and wanted to have an abortion before then deciding to keep the pregnancy, or evidence that she decided to drink in addition to returning to the violent home? Are those additional items that could be added to the decision to return to that violent situation and thereby create that assertion of extreme indifference by the prosecutor? MR. MACLEOD-BALL, continuing, remarked that second, the bill doesn't contain language that suggests that the decision to return or remain in a violent domestic situation can't be used as evidence of reckless behavior, nor is there language to suggest that it couldn't be used as evidence to establish criminal negligence. He asked the committee to consider those issues as the bill moves through the process. In conclusion, he said, "We reiterate our support of a different kind of bill that would include enhanced penalties." 3:43:02 PM ROBIN SMITH, Alaska Pro-Choice Alliance (APCA), said that the APCA supports the intent of SB 20 - men who attack and sometimes kill their pregnant wives and girlfriends should be punished more severely if the fetus is injured or dies. The most appropriate method to punish these offenders, however, is to charge them with enhanced penalties, rather than creating a new, separate crime, and there are several reasons why enhanced penalties are preferable to creating a new crime. For example, enhanced penalties might result in longer prison terms, would avoid the problematic issue of when life begins, and would avoid the potential prosecution of pregnant women that could result in deterring them from seeking appropriate healthcare. She offered her hope that the bill will be changed to strictly address enhanced penalties rather than focusing on prosecuting pregnant women. 3:44:52 PM KATE BURKHART relayed that she would be discussing two points, with the first building upon Mr. Macleod-Ball's testimony. She said: The breadth of certain portions of the bill as written rises to a level of ambiguity and vagueness which could lead to questions of constitutionality. The well-accepted standard for ambiguity in legislation is that if a law fails to give adequate notice of the conduct that is prohibited, or if its imprecise language encourages arbitrary enforcement by allowing prosecuting authorities undue discretion to determine the scope of its prohibitions, it will fail a test of constitutionality. I know there has been plenty of testimony about unintended situations where this bill could be applied, where the conduct of a pregnant woman is actually criminalized. In South Carolina, where there is legislation similar to this in effect, so far there have been 80 women arrested on the basis of their conduct during their pregnancy. And so the fear that this bill will indeed lead to prosecution and incarceration of pregnant women for their conduct to themselves is not unreasonable. Also, given the fact that [the phrase], "extreme indifference to the value of human life" is not actually defined but is instead evaluated based upon a series of factors - which include the social utility of the actor's conduct, the magnitude of the risk created, the ability to foresee harm and the likelihood of harm, and the actor's knowledge of the risk - there is a great deal of breadth to what will fall within the scope of the bill. And it's for those reasons that I do believe that certain aspects of the bill - especially those dealing with manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, assault [in the first degree], and assault [in the second degree] - may fail [a] test of constitutionality. The other issue that I would bring the committee's attention to is that a man who assaults his wife who is not pregnant will, if he is charged, most likely be charged with a misdemeanor whatever the extent of her injuries - that's just a fact of life, almost every legal advocate in this state would testify to that; however, if she's pregnant and she sustains the same injuries but there's an impact to the fetus, now it's a felony. So the public policy implications of this are that the fetus is more important than the woman, and it takes away the woman's value; the woman's value is no longer linked to her own inherent humanity but only to the fact that she has a womb, and that certainly cannot be the point of the bill. The intent of the bill is to protect women from violence and to protect pregnant women from violence, and we know that they are twice as likely to be battered during their pregnancy as not. And so the intent is great, but as drafted, I think that the ambiguities lead to some serious constitutional questions, and, the way that the penalties are set, what we're saying is, pregnant women are more important than just women. Thank you. 3:49:20 PM AMANDA "MANDY" O'NEAL noted that she is five and a half months pregnant. After relaying that a lot of the points she'd intended to make have already been expressed, she pointed out that as a pregnant woman, she worries about a lot of things every day, and gave examples. She stated that she does not want to add to the stress of worrying about her [unborn] child the stress regarding whether she could be prosecuted for flying in a floatplane, for example, as she is required to do for her job. She also pointed out that there are a lot of women who have high-risk pregnancies, like herself, and that when this is the case, a variety of doctors and others will offer different recommendations regarding how she should behave and what actions she should take, and it is up to her to determine the best course of action while keeping in mind that there are risks in being pregnant and that there are no guarantees of a positive outcome. MS. O'NEAL said that all she wants is for people to respect the fact that with a little education, she can make the proper decisions on her own, and ought to be able to do so without the fear of prosecution, particularly given that a fear of prosecution could keep her from seeking out further educational opportunities. In conclusion, she pointed out that without her, there is no baby - the baby would just be an idea; therefore, if the goal is for she and her baby to be safe, the best way to go about it would be to ensure that she is safe. 3:51:40 PM SARALYN TABACHNICK, Executive Director, Aiding Women in Abuse and Rape Emergencies (AWARE Inc.), relayed the following concerns: This bill seems to carry greater concern for the unborn child than for the woman carrying the unborn child, as if the cargo has greater value than the vessel, and it puts pregnant women at risk for all sorts of consequences in the event she miscarries, delivers a stillborn child, or her baby is born with physical injury. This bill does not speak about the pregnant woman experiencing this loss. When pregnant women are injured during domestic violence, the intent is often to cause physical and emotional harm to the pregnant woman. Crimes against pregnant women because they are pregnant, are crimes against women, and stopping violence against women stops violence against future children as well. I wholeheartedly support legislation that protects pregnant women and their future children. I support legislation that enhances penalties on attacks of women who are pregnant. I support legislation that acknowledges and punishes the additional loss and harm experienced by pregnant women. I support legislation that prohibits the shackling of women who are pregnant and already in jail. I support legislation that promotes pregnant women's health through advocacy of healthy behavior, including the development of safe and available and effective services for women and families when substance abuse treatment and mental health services are necessary, and mandatory training for medical providers in miscarriage management, including interpersonal violence training and screening. Pregnant women in safe shelter or in violent relationships are in highly stressful situations, and we work to support and encourage them with healthy coping alternatives. And we also understand that every woman survives violence in her own individual way; adding to her confusion and fear by threatening criminal prosecution will cut off more women from seeking the support they need. I urge you to create legislation that protects pregnant women, rather than place them at risk. Please send the message that violence against pregnant women is unacceptable and that those who assault them will be aggressively punished, by instituting enhanced penalties for these crimes. CHAIR McGUIRE, after ascertaining that no one else wished to testify, closed public testimony on SB 20. 3:55:55 PM REPRESENTATIVE GARA, in response to a suggestion, made a motion to adopt Amendment 2 - labeled 24-LS0197\U.1, Luckhaupt, 2/20/06 - as amended to read: Page 1, line 1: Delete all material and insert: "An Act enhancing penalties for crimes committed  against pregnant women." Page 1, line 3, through page 7, line 18: Delete all material and insert:  "* Section 1. AS 11 is amended by adding a new chapter to read: Chapter 32. Enhanced Penalties.  Sec. 11.32.100. Penalties for crimes committed  against pregnant women. (a) Notwithstanding another provision of this title or AS 12, if a person commits a crime defined in this title against a pregnant woman who the person knew or should have known to be pregnant that results in a miscarriage or stillbirth, the crime shall be punished in the following manner: (1) a crime defined as murder in the first degree under AS 11.41.100 shall be punished by a sentence of 40 - 99 years; (2) a crime defined as murder in the second degree under AS 11.41.110 shall be punished by a sentence of 30 - 99 years; (3) a crime defined in this title as a class A felony shall be punished as an unclassified felony in the manner provided for unclassified felonies in AS 12.55.125; (4) a crime defined in this title as a class B felony shall be punished as a class A felony in the manner provided for class A felonies in AS 12.55.125; (5) a crime defined in this title as a class C felony shall be punished as a class B felony in the manner provided for class B felonies in AS 12.55.125; (6) a crime defined in this title as a class A misdemeanor shall be punished as a class C felony in the manner provided for class C felonies in AS 12.55.125; (7) a crime defined in this title as a class B misdemeanor shall be punished as a class A misdemeanor in the manner provided for class A misdemeanors in AS 12.55.135. (b) The penalties in (a) of this section do not apply to acts committed (1) during a legal abortion to which the pregnant woman, or a person authorized by law to act on the pregnant woman's behalf, consented or for which the consent is implied by law; (2) during any medical treatment of the pregnant woman or the fetus; or (3) by a pregnant woman against herself. (c) In this section, (1) "miscarriage" means the interruption of the normal development of the fetus, other than by a live birth or by an induced abortion, resulting in the complete expulsion or extraction of the fetus from a pregnant woman; (2) "stillbirth" means the death of a fetus before the complete expulsion or extraction from a woman, other than by an induced abortion, irrespective of the duration of the pregnancy.  * Sec. 2. AS 12.55.125(a) is amended to read: (a) A defendant convicted of murder in the first degree shall be sentenced to a definite term of imprisonment of at least 20 years but not more than 99 years. A defendant convicted of murder in the first  degree enhanced under AS 11.32.100(a)(1) shall be  sentenced to a definite term of imprisonment of at  least 40 years but not more than 99 years. A defendant convicted of murder in the first degree shall be sentenced to a mandatory term of imprisonment of 99 years when (1) the defendant is convicted of the murder of a uniformed or otherwise clearly identified peace officer, fire fighter, or correctional employee who was engaged in the performance of official duties at the time of the murder; (2) the defendant has been previously convicted of (A) murder in the first degree under AS 11.41.100 or former AS 11.15.010 or 11.15.020; (B) murder in the second degree under AS 11.41.110 or former AS 11.15.030; or (C) homicide under the laws of another jurisdiction when the offense of which the defendant was convicted contains elements similar to first degree murder under AS 11.41.100 or second degree murder under AS 11.41.110; (3) the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant subjected the murder victim to substantial physical torture; or (4) the defendant is convicted of the murder of and personally caused the death of a person, other than a participant, during a robbery.  * Sec. 3. AS 12.55.125(b) is amended to read: (b) A defendant convicted of attempted murder in the first degree, solicitation to commit murder in the first degree, conspiracy to commit murder in the first degree, kidnapping, or misconduct involving a controlled substance in the first degree shall be sentenced to a definite term of imprisonment of at least five years but not more than 99 years. A defendant convicted of murder in the second degree or  a class A felony enhanced under AS 11.32.100(a)(3) shall be sentenced to a definite term of imprisonment of at least 10 years but not more than 99 years. A defendant convicted of murder in the second degree shall be sentenced to a definite term of imprisonment of at least 20 years but not more than 99 years when the sentence is enhanced under AS 11.32.100(a)(2) or  when the defendant is convicted of the murder of a child under 16 years of age and the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant (1) was a natural parent, a stepparent, an adopted parent, a legal guardian, or a person occupying a position of authority in relation to the child; or (2) caused the death of the child by committing a crime against a person under AS 11.41.200 - 11.41.530. In this subsection, "legal guardian" and "position of authority" have the meanings given in AS 11.41.470.  * Sec. 4. AS 12.55.155(c) is amended by adding a new paragraph to read: (33) the defendant was convicted of an offense specified in AS 11.41. and knew ore reasonably should have known that the victim was pregnant"  * Sec. 5. The uncodified law of the State of Alaska is amended by adding a new section to read: APPLICABILITY. AS 11.32.100, enacted by sec. 1 of this Act, and AS 12.55.125(a) and (b), as amended by secs. 2 and 3 of this Act, apply to crimes committed on or after the effective date of this Act." REPRESENTATIVE GARA, in response to a question, explained that the intent of Amendment 2, as amended, is to impose stiffer penalties against a person who assaults or does worse to a pregnant woman thereby causing a miscarriage or stillbirth when the person knew or should have had reason to know that the woman was pregnant, with the stiffer penalties resulting in sentences at least as long as is currently provided for in CSSB 20(2d JUD) because such crimes shall be punished as if they were a higher level crime. In similar situations that don't result in a miscarriage or stillbirth, the sentence shall be enhanced via an aggravator. REPRESENTATIVE COGHILL objected to Amendment 2, as amended. REPRESENTATIVE GARA opined that there should be enhanced penalties - more serious penalties, greater sentences - when one attacks, murders, or assaults a pregnant woman and causes a miscarriage, but indicated that he doesn't want the bill to include language that could later be used to reverse Roe v. Wade. Representative Gara surmised that the sponsor would prefer that the bill continue to use the term, "unborn child". 3:59:33 PM REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON surmised that the rationale for the bill is to respond to situations such as occurred to Laci Peterson, but pointed out that her husband didn't care that his wife was pregnant and so such a bill wouldn't have deterred him from killing her. Representative Anderson said he views the bill as intending to protect pregnant women from violence, but acknowledged that it does have a tendency to protect the unborn child over the mother. Representative Anderson opined that if one knowingly hurts a pregnant women, he/she should be punished more severely, but he does not want a woman prosecuted for actions she herself undertakes - such as participating in outdoor activities - that unintentionally result in a miscarriage. REPRESENTATIVE GARA concurred. He opined that although current law does not go far enough with regard to protecting pregnant women from assault or worse, there are still a few problems with the bill, one of those being whether the term, "unborn child" could be used to challenge Roe v. Wade. He, therefore, has decided to create [language] that will protect women against assault while staying away from a Roe v. Wade debate. Another problem with the bill, he remarked, is that proposed AS 11.41.170 - which establishes the crime of criminally negligent homicide of an unborn child - will criminalize a pregnant woman if she causes the death of her fetus by means of a dangerous instrument, and the courts have already said that a car, for example, is a dangerous instrument; therefore, a woman could be criminalized for getting into a car accident that results in a miscarriage or stillbirth. He said: "I don't think it is right for us to come up with a new way to criminalize conduct by a pregnant woman who does not intend to harm her [fetus]." REPRESENTATIVE GARA reiterated his earlier comments and compared the sentencing scheme in the bill with the sentencing scheme in Amendment 2, as amended, characterizing those sentencing schemes as functionally equivalent. For example, for a crime committed against a pregnant woman that results in her death and in the death of her fetus, where the bill proposes two 20-year sentences, Amendment 2, as amended, proposes one 40-year sentence, and so on. Essentially, in each instance, the bill provides for two crimes with separate sentences, whereas Amendment 2, as amended, provides for one crime with one sentence, with that one sentence being at least as long if not longer than what the bill proposes via two sentences. 4:13:37 PM SENATOR DYSON relayed that the original bill included language stating that nothing in it would allow a woman to be prosecuted for her own actions, but Senate members wanted to protect an unborn child from the mother's reckless conduct. He said he would not object to reinserting the language that protects the mother from prosecution, but indicated that he is strongly opposed to changing the bill such that it would no longer provide for two crimes - one for actions taken against the mother, and one for actions taken against the unborn child. One of the main points of SB 20, he indicated, is to establish that an unborn child is worthy of protection, and he went on to note that Ms. Carpeneti from the Department of Law would be able to explain why the bill's current language would make prosecuting a mother for her own actions highly unlikely. SENATOR DYSON, in response to comments, again indicated that he would be strongly opposed to any amendment that would eliminate the bill's provisions establishing two separate crimes - one for actions taken against the mother, and one for actions taken against the unborn child - as that would defeat the purpose of SB 20, that purpose being to establish that an unborn child has intrinsic value of its own and is worthy of protection. He relayed that the original version of SB 20 stipulated that its provisions would "not apply to acts that ... (3) are committed by a pregnant woman against herself and her own unborn child". REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON indicated that he would not support a bill that has the potential to allow a pregnant woman to be prosecuted for her own actions. SENATOR DYSON pointed out that if the committee wishes to reinsert the aforementioned language, it will also need to make other changes to the bill as well. 4:23:02 PM REPRESENTATIVE GARA said: I don't mean any disrespect by not technically having a second crime with a second name for when you cause a miscarriage. That doesn't mean that we do not value a woman's pregnancy or the baby that she's carrying, just like it doesn't mean we don't value the lives of the victims who survive somebody who was killed in a murder. When you murder somebody - and, as you know, that has occurred in my family - ... the crime is murder. There is no separate crime because the victim had a son, a daughter - there is no separate crime for each victim in the family who remains alive - the crime is called murder. When we've developed the crime of murder, we meant no disrespect to the interests of those people who still survived, [people] who were in some way hurt almost as much as the person who died. So I do not agree with the argument that just because we don't have a separate named crime for every victim of a murder or assault, we somehow disrespects all of the victims - I don't buy it. And I say that in a manner that's a little bit emotional, A, out of my own experience, and, B, because I take some offense. I take some offense that you believe that I think one crime is just like another crime. So I would ask you to think about the fact that we impose the same sentences you want to impose and really our difference is one of language. But I don't ... disrespect the fact that a woman who has a miscarriage has lost a baby - I value that as a separate interest. And then this whole thing about what language you're using -- ... I'm sorry that we disagree about the use of the [words], "unborn child", ... [but] unfortunately I know that that language is being used, frankly, because of the broader abortion debate - maybe not because [of], but it's going to have an impact on the broader abortion debate. That's why I'm trying to avoid it. I don't consider somebody after they've been born, a born child; I consider them a child. And frankly I personally consider somebody that a woman is carrying during her pregnancy, a baby. That's what I consider it, because I don't look up my Black's Law Dictionary when I come up with these terms; I don't know what the technical word should be - I just know how I speak. So I don't think we need to have this fight about [how] you should technically have to call somebody, but ... when you tell me that I'm not properly recognizing the interest of a baby because I don't call it an unborn child, I would tell you, I also don't call a baby who is born, a born child. So I don't ... feel guilty for not calling a baby an unborn child. SENATOR DYSON said: "I mourned with my middle daughter, and we wept, when she lost two children. She and I believed she lost something of value - it wasn't just a pregnancy - there's another two more grandkids of mine I don't have." He then offered another example: This gal and her dead son, when she buried him. Her husband beat her until the child died within her and was born stillborn. When she finally crawled out of the home and got help, they took her to the hospital, [and] she delivered a dead child. She said: "My own injuries [were] life-threatening. I nearly died. I spent three weeks in the hospital. During the time I was struggling to survive, the legal authorities came and spoke to my sister; they told her something she found incredible, they told her [that] in the eyes of Wisconsin law, nobody had died on the night of February 8th." I don't know how we can say that it's not a Homo sapiens child that died. And if you choose to eliminate the second crime, here, that's a statement that people of this state get to make through their elected officials - that's your choice - but I feel very strongly about it; 28 other states have done it on one level and it's in federal law. Various polls run between 56 and 82 percent of how many people think that if you kill a child while you're assaulting its mother, [you've] got two victims. ... REPRESENTATIVE WILSON asked for an explanation regarding the standards of reckless and negligent. SENATOR DYSON, in response to a different question, reiterated his understanding that according to the Department of Law, the standards in the current bill are high enough to make it unlikely that a woman would be prosecuted for her own actions. 4:32:01 PM ANNE CARPENETI, Assistant Attorney General, Legal Services Section-Juneau, Criminal Division, Department of Law (DOL), in response to a concern expressed earlier, said that [CSSB 20(2d JUD)] tracks a lot of the state's current murder and assault statutes. For example, the phrase, "extreme indifference to the value of human life" is an element of the crime of murder in the second degree, and so it is not language that a court would have difficulty applying or that a prosecutor would have difficulty making a reasonable decision about. REPRESENTATIVE GRUENBERG asked whether a pregnant woman driving negligently could be prosecuted under the bill for criminally negligent homicide of an unborn child if she gets in an accident that causes her to have a miscarriage. REPRESENTATIVE WILSON asked whether the same could be done in a situation involving a pregnant woman who goes skiing during her eighth month of pregnancy. REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON added a stipulation to Representative Gruenberg's example that the pregnant woman did not intend to cause any harm to her unborn child by her actions in driving negligently. SENATOR DYSON offered his understanding that the charges a woman might face under the bill for what she does to her unborn child are no different than what she would face had she given birth to that child and it was sitting beside her in the car - his intention is for the standard to be the same. MS. CARPENETI, in response to questions, said it is very unlikely that the woman would be charged, because the bill recites criminally negligent homicide the same way current law does, that is to say that a person acts with criminal negligence with respect to a circumstance, which would be the death of a child, when the person fails to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the result will occur and that the circumstances exist. Furthermore, the risk must be of such a nature and degree that the failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe in the circumstances. Therefore, she surmised, in the example about a pregnant woman driving too fast over icy roads, the DOL wouldn't bring a charge because the circumstances don't rise to the level of criminal negligence. She added, "Criminally negligent homicide - we ... often prosecute drunk driving [as that] when you kill somebody, or, depending on the circumstances, it could be [charged as] manslaughter because the conduct is reckless, or you could even get, sometimes, [a charge of] murder in the second degree for drunk driving that causes a wreck and kills someone." 4:37:04 PM REPRESENTATIVE WILSON surmised, then, that SB 20 is simply saying that the death of an unborn child can be counted as a murder. MS. CARPENETI explained that SB 20 would require that the harm occurred via the use of a dangerous instrument for that to be the case, whereas under current law, the crime of criminally negligent homicide does not have such a requirement. SENATOR DYSON characterized [that requirement] as a higher standard. REPRESENTATIVE GRUENBERG noted that a car is [considered] a dangerous instrument. REPRESENTATIVE GARA offered his understanding, however, that currently, if a pregnant woman, while driving, gets into a car accident and a miscarriage results, her behavior would be considered negligent driving, whereas if Senator Dyson's bill passes, the same circumstance could result in the woman also being charged with murder. MS. CARPENETI offered her belief that Representative Gara is correct in his understanding because current law regarding homicide doesn't consider a fetus a person. REPRESENTATIVE GRUENBERG directed members attention to page 2, lines [26-30] - proposed AS 11.41.17 - and again pointed out that a car is considered a dangerous instrument and that a violation of this proposed statute would be a class B felony, and offered his understanding that this would be equivalent to manslaughter; proposed AS 11.41.170 in CSSB 20(2dJUD) read: (a) A person commits the crime of criminally negligent homicide of an unborn child if, with criminal negligence, the person causes the death of an unborn child by means of a dangerous instrument. (b) Criminally negligent homicide of an unborn child is a class B felony. MS. CARPENETI clarified that criminally negligent homicide is a class B felony, manslaughter is a class A felony, and murder is an unclassified felony. REPRESENTATIVE GRUENBERG offered his understanding that in a situation involving a car wreck, the intent of the bill is to say that even if the baby is not yet born but dies, the person could be charged as if the baby had been born and dies; in other words, the person could be charged with criminally negligent homicide. CHAIR McGUIRE remarked on the difficulty of struggling with where to draw line on this issue. She elaborated: We want to be careful that women aren't seen as mere vessels but that they are lives, and that they have their own life and their own worth and that the choices they make are worthwhile and important and difficult. You heard the pregnant woman that testified earlier - and I just experienced it - you do worry every single day that what you eat has enough nutrition and that you're not overworking yourself but then if you don't work how do you make a living and provide for your child. ... And so I sit here today, Senator Dyson, and I can ... feel the pain of my committee because in some ways, [Amendment 2, as amended, addresses] ... part of ... the concern but gets us away from this other, "respect of unborn life" as you referred to it, but then if we keep the bill the way it is, you end up in circumstances where I think you have women, hopefully acting in good faith, making choices that may lead to their imprisonment. I don't know that we want to see that, I don't even know if we have enough room in our jails as it is right now. There's testimony that in South Carolina, 80 women were arrested. ... CHAIR McGUIRE relayed that she would hold the bill over and allow all parties to give the issues raised further consideration. SENATOR DYSON offered the suggestion that the committee go back to the original language that ensured that a woman could not be prosecuted for her own actions. He surmised that there are people who are worried that adoption of CSSB 20(2d JUD) would recognize in law that an unborn human child has intrinsic worth on its own, and he acknowledged that this would produce a dichotomy in the way Americans view this issue. He reiterated his belief that it would be unlikely that a pregnant woman would be prosecuted for her own actions under the bill as currently written. 4:45:58 PM CHAIR McGUIRE expressed an interest in discussing that issue further. Regardless of one's feeling for Roe v. Wade, it has achieved a civil balance in this country, she remarked, adding that she does not want the House Judiciary Standing Committee to be used a vehicle to go back to [the days prior to Roe v. Wade with regard to how abortion is viewed]. She surmised that Representative Gara is merely attempting to address that issue as it might relate to SB 20. She then asked Representative Gara to think about the "eggshell plaintiff" theory when giving further consideration to Amendment 2, as amended; that theory provides that when one causes harm to another, he/she is responsible for all the harm that is caused regardless of intent or awareness, and one of the problems with Amendment 2, as amended, she opined, is that it would only apply if the person knew or should have known that the victim was pregnant. REPRESENTATIVE GARA said that's a very good point. He suggested that perhaps the best way to do it would be to enhance the penalties as has been discussed and then have an aggravator apply when a person causes a miscarriage, regardless of whether he/she intended that to happen and regardless of whether he/she knew the victim was pregnant. He indicated that he is convinced that such a situation will be taken seriously by the courts, and so would be amenable to an amendment or revision to amendment 2, as amended. [CSHB 20(2d JUD), as amended, was held over with the question of whether to adopt Amendment 2, as amended, left pending.]